mercredi 15 septembre 2004

John Kerry: Mensch

Sure, this is a political move, but as political moves go, it certainly has more than its share of warm fuzzies:



On Sunday, September 12, the Decatur, GA Daily News reported:



Gobbell of Moulton didn't pay a cent for the sticker that she proudly displays on the rear windshield of her Chevrolet Lumina, but said it cost her job at a local factory after it angered her boss, Phil Gaddis.



Gaddis, a Decatur bankruptcy attorney, owns Enviromate, a cellulose insulation company in Moulton.



Gaddis did not return phone calls from THE DAILY about the alleged Thursday firing.



Gobbell said she consulted a lawyer, but then changed her mind about going to see him. She said she has cried about the incident and must do without income for three weeks while the state unemployment commission decides if she is eligible for compensation.



Gobbell said she was averaging 50 to 60 hours a week on the plant's bagging machine.



"The lady there (at the unemployment commission) said that she has never heard of a firing like this before," Gobbell said.





Tim Noah at Slate, who is monitoring the prevalence of Americans being fired from their jobs because of their political beliefs, notes the role of the blogosphere (alas, not this one, mostly because everyone else covered the story so well:



The story was picked up by Daily Kos, a political Web log, and spread quickly around the Web. By this morning, Geddes, who has declined to comment publicly on the matter, had apparently had enough of the bad publicity. Through an intermediary, he offered Gobbell an apology and said she could have her old job back. But Gobbell said she wouldn't return without some written guarantee that Geddes wouldn't turn around and fire her once he was out of the spotlight. Then, late this afternoon, Kerry himself phoned Gobbell. "He was telling me how proud he was that I stood up," Gobbell told me. "He'd read the part where Phil said I could either work for him or work for John Kerry. He said, 'you let him know you're working for me as of today.' I was just so shocked."



Gobbell accepted Kerry's job offer, "so I reckon I'll be working for John Kerry." Kerry left it that someone from his campaign would call Gobbell to work out the details. Let's hope there's quick follow-through (I'll be checking!), because Gobbell told me she couldn't wait to tell Geddes that she had a better offer.





A rare moment of "Woo!" in this awful political season.

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